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Azerbaijan dissatisfied with Minsk Group voting at UN GA

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  • Azerbaijan dissatisfied with Minsk Group voting at UN GA

    ITAR-TASS, Russia
    March 15 2008

    Azerbaijan dissatisfied with Minsk Group voting at UN GA

    15.03.2008, 17.36


    BAKU, March 15 (Itar-Tass) - Azerbaijan expressed dissatisfaction
    with the OSCE Minsk Group position on the voting on the U.N. General
    Assembly resolution on Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The Friday's U.N. resolution on the situation on Azerbaijan's
    occupied territories `is an important document and should be
    considered a principled base for the settlement of the Karabakh
    conflict', Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov said on
    Saturday.

    The high-ranking Azerbaijani official who is presidential special
    envoy for the settlement of the conflict stressed that during
    discussions, `Azerbaijan faced resistance, including from the
    co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group for Nagorno-Karabakh - Russia,
    France and the United States.' Azimov explained this by their
    unwillingness `to lose the leading role in the settlement of the
    conflict'.

    The deputy minister exposed Baku's categorical position. In his
    words, `the talks can't continue in the dark on the base of the
    priorities set up by the mediators and their pledges, which are not
    always right.'

    `They (the co-chairmen) can't doubt that we'll work further on the
    base of our position supported by the U.N. General Assembly,' Azimov
    said. He disagreed with the co-chairmen's statements saying the
    resolution was aimed against the balanced package of mediators'
    proposals.

    In his view, `the co-chairmen's proposals can't be considered
    balanced because they don't involve plans on the liberation of
    Kelbajar and Lachi districts in the west of Azerbaijan that border
    Armenia in the south-west and on the return of Azeris to
    Nagorno-Karabakh.'

    Azimov recalled that the three co-chairmen of the Minsk Group had
    been elected in 1997 under difficult conditions. In his words, `it
    can be changed under certain circumstances.' `The co-chairmen should
    realise that they are not monopolists and that there are other
    countries in the Minsk Group,' the deputy minister stressed.

    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan said the majority of U.N.
    member-states refuted a unilateral approach towards settling the
    Karabakh confict.

    Commenting on Friday's voting on the U.N. draft resolution on
    Nagorno-Karabakh submitted by Azerbaijan, Oskanyan said, `The
    majority of U.N. member-countries rejected a unilateral approach'
    towards settling the Karabakh conflict.

    The minister said the purpose of the draft resolution `is to provide
    international support for Azerbaijan's position on the Karabakh
    problem'.

    He hopes that the results of the voting at the U.N. General Assembly
    `will give Azerbaijan a clear signal'. The Armenian minister said he
    showed interest in Azerbaijan's next steps in this aspect - `if it
    agrees to continue talks in order to search for a compromise'.

    Oskanyan confirmed that newly elected president Serzh Sarkisyan `is
    ready to meet Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev at the earliest
    opportunity whether the Minsk Group co-chairmen put forth such
    proposal and whether Azerbaijan agrees'. `There is such an
    opportunity and now it's Azerbaijan's turn,' the Armenian minister
    said.

    The resolution was supported by 39 countries, the member-states of
    GUAM (Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine) and the
    member-countries of the Organisations of Islamic Conference.
    Member-countries of the OSCE Minsk Group - Russia, France and the
    United States, as well as Armenia, and some other states voted
    against the document. Over 100 countries abstained and many states
    did not take part in the voting.
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